Coming from using GNU screen regularly, I'm looking for tmux to do the same things. On of the things I do regularly is have a couple of different windows open, one with some code open in vim, and a couple of terminals windows open to test the code, and sometimes a window or two for various other things. I split the screen vertically and will often have the vim window in the top pane and then one of the other windows in the bottom bane.

The main commands I then use are Ctrla,Tab to rotate among the panes and Ctrla,n to rotate between the windows within a pane. For instance, with vim in the top pane, I switch to the bottom pane and then rotate through the other terminals, doing whatever I need. The screen stays split the whole time.

The problem is I can't find comparable capability to screen's Ctrla,n in tmux. Switching windows seems to not work inside a pane, but jumps entirely. If the screen is split the only two options seem to be to jump to some window that isn't split and then split it or to do a sub-split of a pane. Neither are what I was looking for.

Your terminology is a little confusing. In tmux a window can be split into multiple panes. Are you trying to cycle between panes in a window with a keybind?
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jasonwryanOct 28 '12 at 22:55

I was trying to follow the nomenclature of the tools, but I admit it is confusing. I know how to change focus from one pane to another. What I'm trying to find out is how to cycle what is displayed in a particular pane without otherwise changing the layout.
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FooBarOct 29 '12 at 2:05

So to move content from one pane to another? Are you looking for swap-pane? If you are looking to emulate screen's Ctrl-a n, then the tmux equivalent is Ctrl-b n.
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jasonwryanOct 29 '12 at 2:32

2 Answers
2

tmux and screen have different models so there is no exact equivalent.

In screen terms, a split lets you display multiple windows at the same time. next (C-a n) rotates windows through the active part of the split; this lets you rotate “hidden” windows through the active region of the split.

In tmux terms, a split divides a window into one or more panes. Each part of a split window is an individual pane, panes are never hidden (if a window is selected (visible) all its panes are, too), and a pane can only be used in a single split of one window (a pane can not be in multiple windows, and it can not be in multiple splits of the same window). There are commands to move panes around in (or between) windows, but not in an identical way to next in screen.

You could use a binding like the following to arrange a similar effect:

bind-key C-n swap-pane -s :+.top \; rotate-window -Ut :+

You will probably want to put this in your ~/.tmux.conf file, but you can just type/paste it after Prefix: to bind it in your current server instance.

To use the binding, pick your “main window”, split it, create a “pane container” window immediately after the “main window”, then use the binding to rotate any pane in the “main window” among the group in the “pane container” window.

Here is how you might create the setup:

Pick a window to use as your “main window”. Start (e.g.) Vim in it.

Split your “main window” into two panes.

E.g. Prefix" (:split-window)

You can use this pane as your testing window (or log viewer, or whatever).

Create a new window (the “pane container”) immediately after your main window.

E.g. Prefixc (:new-window)

It is important that no other window gets between the indexes of the “main window” and the “pane container” window (+ in the window specifiers used in the bound commands means “the next higher numbered window”).

Split this window into a number of panes. To rotate through three panes, split this window into two panes (the third pane is the one in the “main window”).

Maybe you need a shell for git, and a shell for running a database interface. Put each in a separate pane in this “pane container” window.

Switch back to your “main window”. Select the pane that you want to “rotate out”.

You can use PrefixUp/Down/Left/Right to move among the panes.

Invoke the binding to swap the current pane with the first pane in “pane container” window and (“behind the scenes”) rotate the panes inside the “pane container” window (so that the next time you run the binding, the first command swaps with the “next” pane in the sequence).

PrefixControl-n (the binding use C-n, but you could change this to whatever you like).

Thank you! Great explanation and your suggested binding does appear to at least replicate the functionality I was looking for.
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FooBarNov 1 '12 at 1:10

Excuse me, how might one full size a pane and then swap back to the previous arrangement
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James AndinoOct 12 '13 at 18:11

@JamesAndino: tmux 1.8 has resize-pane -Z (by default, bound to Prefix + z) that temporarily “zooms” a pane to be the full size of the window. For version prior to 1.8 there was no built-in way to do it; others have crafted scripted solutions from other built-in commands (e.g. some of the answers to the SU question “Maximizing” a pane in tmux).
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Chris JohnsenOct 12 '13 at 19:46

I'm sorry, but I wasn't very clear. I've figure out how to move from panel to panel. In tmux Ctrl b + o functions about the same as Ctrl a + Tab in screen. What I'm looking for is the equivalent functionality as screen's Ctrl a + n.
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FooBarOct 29 '12 at 1:56

@FooBar how about Ctrl-b+{ or Ctrl-b+}? That is about as close as I can find to that functionality. Pane's aren't done the same way in tmux as they are handled in screen.
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sparticvsOct 29 '12 at 3:27